McClure v. Heirs of Sheek

4 S.W. 552, 68 Tex. 426, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 711
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1887
DocketNo. 5660
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 4 S.W. 552 (McClure v. Heirs of Sheek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClure v. Heirs of Sheek, 4 S.W. 552, 68 Tex. 426, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 711 (Tex. 1887).

Opinion

Gaines, Associate Justice.

The court did not err in overruling appellant’s application for a continuance. Before the term of the court at which the case was tried the attorneys for appellant had telegraphed the attorney for appellees asking that the cause be continued by consent, and had received an answer through the same channel, granting the request. Appellees hearing of this, and . not being willing to continue for the term, appeared at court on the first day and employed other counsel, and had notice given to appellant’s attorneys that they would not carry out the arrangement. On the fifth day of the first week the case was called for trial, and appellants, who were plaintiffs in the court, below, asked that the case be continued [429]*429under the agreement. Appellees resisted the motion on the ground, that they had not authorized the agreement by their attorney, and that it was greatly to their prejudice; and thereupon the court set down the case for trial on a day of the third week of the term.

Upon the casé being called upon the day set down, plaintiffs presented an application in writing for a continuance of the cause on account of the agreement, and defendants filed an affidavit resisting the application, setting forth that the agreement was made without their consent, and facts showing that it was greatly to their prejudice to continue the cause to another term. Plain! tiffs did not show that they were not ready for trial, nor did they show that the agreement had operated in any manner to prevent their being ready.

.Agreements of counsel in regard to the trial of a cause are not absolute, although in writing, and are not to be treated as contracts to be enforced under all circumstances. They may be set aside by the court in the exercise of a sound discretion when their enforcement would result in serious injury to one of the parties, and the other would not be prejudiced by its being set aside. (Hancock v. Winans, 20 Texas, 320.) Here defendants showed that the continuance of the cause was likely to’result in the loss of the cattle, which were the subject matter of the litigation, and plaintiffs showed no grounds for a continuance except the naked agreement.

¡Neither did the count err in excluding the deposition of the witness Martin Layne. The bill of exceptions shows that the witness was in attendance upon the court at the time and was held under the rule. That a deposition can not be read under such circumstances over the objection of the adverse party is expressly decided by this court in the case of Randall v. Collins, 52 Texas, 435. The question in that case arose under the act of 1879 (Revised Statutes, art. 2218, note); and the ruling is in accordance with the former decisions of the court under the previous law. (Elliott v. Mitchell, 28 Texas, 105; Boetge v. Landa, 22 Texas, 105.)

It was not error to exclude the testimony of McClure as to a declaration made to him by one of the party who were driving a portion of the cattle, to the effect that the cattle they were driving belonged to J. W. Sheek. Plaintiffs claimed that the cattle in controversy were the property of J. W. Sheek. He was in control of a number of cattle bearing the same brand when [430]*430the declaration was made; but we infer he was not immediately present. But whether present or not, the declaration was inadmissible. He could not by his own declaration have made evidence in favor of his own right against Gr. W. Sheek, under whom defendants claim, nor could a third party do so for him. Hence, plaintiffs who claim through him could not avail themselves of such declarations. The evidence was strictly hearsay and was properly excluded.

Appellants by their fifth assignment allege that the court erred in permitting a witness to testify that it was the custom of the country for persons having charge of cattle belonging to other persons to render the property for assessment in their own names. Plaintiffs had shown that J. W. Sheek had given in to the assessor the cattle in his own name. This evidence was offered as a circumstance tending to show that they were J. W. Sheek’s- cattle. How, if it were true that such a custom existed in that county, this fact was calculated to weaken the force of the circumstance which plaintiffs had proved, and was, therefore, good evidence for defendant in rebuttal. It was explanatory of a suspicious circumstance against defendants, and was, therefore, admissible without reference to any question whether such custom was lawful or unlawful. The witness was the assessor of the county, and was in a position to have known the fact about which he testified. We conclude the court did not err in admitting the evidence.

The proposition under the sixth and seventh assignments of error is that “the court erred in admitting the pretended copies of brands of Gr. W. Sheek in Palo Pinto and Jack counties, because they showed different brands in each county, and because the law allows but one mark and one brand for one person.”

It is true that the statute provides that a party shall have but one mark and brand (Revised Statutes, article 4556); but this was not intended to prohibit a stock owner from changing them. The bill of exceptions to the introduction of the record from Palo Pinto was based upon the grounds, first, that the record was a mere recital of the mark and brand ostensibly made by the clerk, and second, that it appeared that Gr. W. Sheek had another brand in Parker county. It is sufficient to say in regard to the first objection that the entry upon the record book showed distinctly the brand and mark claimed by Gr. W. Sheek, and that this attained all the purposes of the law. Its form was [431]*431a, matter of no importance otherwise. As to the second ground, the bill of exceptions shows that the Palo Pinto brand was recorded in 1875, and the Parker county record was not made until 1880, long after the cattle in controversy had been removed from that county. We do not see that the latter record invalidated the former. A different brand from that of record in Palo Pinto was registered in Jack county in 1877. The evidence shows that the brand was changed to that recorded in the latter county after the cattle were removed there, and that this was made necessary by others claiming the former brand in that county. We see no error in admitting the evidence.

. The other assignments relate to the giving and refusal of charges. It appears, that in 1873, J. W. Sheek sold a tract of land for two thousand seven hundred dollars, of which seven hundred dollars was paid. J. M. Layne, a debtor of Sheek’s vendee; assumed to pay the balance in cattle. It was agreed that this debt should be paid to Gr. W. Sheek, a brother of J. W. Sheek, and the debtor executed an obligation to him. J. W. Sheek was then insolvent and owed the debt, upon which the judgment was obtained which plaintiffs in this proceeding are seeking to enforce. Defendants claim and the evidence shows, that at the time of the transfér of the debt to their father, Gr. W. Sheek, by J. W. Sheek, the latter was indebted to the former in the sum of six hundred and ninety-six dollars, and that the transfer was made to secure this debt, and that the balance when collected was to be paid on a debt of three thousand dollars J. W. Sheek owed to J. S. Sheek, another brother, provided the last named creditor was not paid out of certain collaterals he then held. When the obligation for the cattle fell due, Layne made a bill of sale to G. W. Sheek to fifty-eight head of cattle valued at six hundred and ninety-six dollars, which discharged the debt due from J. W. Sheek to G. W.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.W. 552, 68 Tex. 426, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclure-v-heirs-of-sheek-tex-1887.